Some songs have titles that aren't used in the lyrics, and end up becoming better known for their lyrics than their title.
Bob Dylan's "Rainy Day Women #12 & 35" is better known for the refrain "Everybody must get stoned" than it is for the title.

Let's get it crunk upon, have fun upon/Up in this dancery/We got ya'll open, now ya floatin'/So you gots to dance for me/Don't need no hateration, holleration/In this dancery/Let's get it percolatin' while you're waiting/So just dance for me - xxxpress

Joe Romersa should really stop naming his songs. Also, this one puts me more in mind of SH2 than SH3. On with the chorus: Here's a lullaby to close your eyes, goodbye It was always you that I despised I don't feel enough for you to cry, oh no Here's a lullaby to close your eyes Goodbye, goodbye, goodbye, goodbye - Sheogorath

"Back to the front... You will do what I say when I say Back to the front You will die when I say you must die Back to the front You coward...you servant...you blind man" The words 'hungry heroes', but never disposable heroes - FullMoonWisdom

"Dear mother, Dear father, what is this hell you have put me through Believer, deceiver, day in day out, live my life through you Pushed on to me what's wrong or right Hidden from this thing they call life..." No where does it say dyer's eve! - FullMoonWisdom

Look it's Me The one who can't be free Much to young to focus But to old to see Hey hey Look it's Me "When no one wants to see See what you brought this world Just what you wanna see.... Hey Ma! Hey Ma...Look it's Me" No mention anywhere in the song of prince charming - FullMoonWisdom

"Independence limited Freedom of choice is made for you my friend Freedom of speech is words that they will bend Freedom with their exception" Once again, no mention of eye of the beholder. - FullMoonWisdom

"Don't go lookin' for snakes you might find them Don't send your eyes to the sun you might blind them Haven't I seen you here before? There ain't no heroes here....No No more..." Never mention's the word slither - FullMoonWisdom

'But tell me....can you heal what father's done Or fix this hole in mother's son Can you heal the broken wounds within Can you strip away so we can start again' The only mention of fix in the song, nothing of fixxxer - FullMoonWisdom

MFSB and the Three Degrees

T.S.O.P. (The Sound of Philadelphia)

Although considered by some to be an instrumental, it does contain the lyrics "Let's get it on, it's time to get down" in the repeat and fade section of the song. - Bob Borst

Neither the word "cannibal" nor the word "song" ever occurs in the lyrics (not that the latter would much be expected to occur). The most repeated line is "Thrown into a cell". Song seems to be more about torture than about cannibalism. - Holly Stefan

In my dreams I'm dying all the time, as I wake its kaleidoscopic mind I never meant to hurt you, I never meant to lie So this is goodbye, This is goodbye.... (mostly music with few lyrics and used in several ads and movie soundtracks, but still "Porcelain" is never mentioned in the song) - Allen Sanchez

This song is often mistakenly thought to be titled "In This Generation" or "This Generation" because that phrase is prominent in the song. There is no mention of the phrase "For Pete's Sake" anywhere in its lyrics. - Isac

RCA disliked the title of Mickey Dolenz's song, but told The Monkees that as the words in the title did not appear in the lyrics, they would accept an 'alternate title' for the song. It was promptly named "Alternate Title" in protest. "Why don't you cut your hair?, Why don't you live up there?, Why don't you do what I do, See what I feel when I care?" - FussBudget

As the last track of one of his best albums, "Vauxhall & I", "Speedway" features the terrifying sound of something like the motor of a chainsaw or maybe the starting of a powerful engine - though the word speedway is never heard in the song. - usedtobeen

The title of this song is borrowed from Alan Bennett's play "Forty Years On", but never appears in it. The Song is famous for Morrissey's probably best line "Leather elbows on a tweed coat - is that the best you can do?" - usedtobeen

I thought it was a song with Spanish language, but it's not. The lyric is "You could've been number one". Why the title isn't "One" instead of "Uno" if it doesn't contain any word in Spanish language? - Nurul